Introduction
Although there is little consensus on the historical definition of globalisation,Footnote 1 it is generally believed that its contemporary meaning developed in the 1970s and came into common usage in the 1980s. In 2000, the International Monetary Fund identified four basic aspects of globalisation: (1) trade, (2) financial flows, (3) labour migration, and (4) the dissemination of knowledge.Footnote 2 The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has brought one of globalisation's most important aspects, human mobility, to a virtual standstill. After the World Health Organisation declared COVID-19 a pandemic, most countries imposed strict border closures to halt the spread of the virus, which restricted movement and brought economic activity to a halt.
According to a major report by the UN International Organisation for Migration (IOM), in the initial phase of the pandemic alone, there were over 43,300 travel measures and at least 70 travel bans implemented across the world (January–May 2020). The same report states that ‘the number of passengers on international flights fell by 92% in April and May compared to the same months in 2019. At the same time, [the EU border agency] Frontex recorded an all-time low in irregular border crossings.’Footnote 3 As for outward mobility from China, the general downward trend in travel that followed the global pandemic affected the outward mobility of Chinese workers. According to the Ministry of Commerce of the PRC, the total number of the dispatched workers overseas reached 992,000. This number almost halved during the pandemic: from January to August of 2020, ‘644,000 workers were working overseas’ according to the Ministry's statistics.Footnote 4 So, in terms of mobility and global trade, which has also suffered an overall setback, 2020 should probably be described as a time of ‘deglobalisation’. According to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the global economy has experienced the slowest growth and a decreased rate of wealth and employment as a consequence of COVID-19.Footnote 5
COVID-19 was indeed the trigger for a crisis in globalisation. It has cast doubt on taken-for-granted economic and governance models, for both powerful global leaders as well as developing states.Footnote 6 The pandemic is undoubtedly leading the world to a gradual move away from the harmonisation of international law which features a liberal international orderFootnote 7 back towards the Westphalian origins of the international legal system.Footnote 8 Against this background, as during past decades, China has become both a labour supplier and a magnet country for global migrant workers, and has been at the epicentre of domestic and international change in response to the challenges posed by the pandemic. Considering its significant international role, we turn an eye to how China's labour and capital policies have changed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, we focus this article on China's relationship with emerging economies (EEs) and economies in transition (E&Ts),Footnote 9 or states in the earlier stages of economic development.
As nations already experiencing heightened levels of precarity given their uncertain position in the global supply chain, EEs and E&Ts have been overwhelmed by the challenges of the pandemic and the displacement of transnational economic infrastructures. As a result, many of these states were forced to significantly change or revolutionise their relationships with China, a powerful and committed partner. As a related consideration, while more powerful states have begun the process of ‘moving on’ from the impacts of the pandemic, we believe it is important to analyse the lasting impacts of COVID-19 on the relationships between China and these under-researched regions to bring a more global perspective to the extent of this problem. In doing so, we focus on three regions, including Africa, China's southwestern border states, and the Balkans. We argue that it is timely now to examine Chinese laws, policies and practices in relation to labour and capital, with particular regard towards its partners in emerging economies and economies in transition, which were burdened disproportionately by the impacts of the pandemic. In this work, we examine recent shifts in the labour and capital laws, policies, and practices linking China and these regions, how these shifts might influence the political economy landscape, and what these shifts imply domestically and internationally, especially with respect to China's Belt and Road Initiative partners. We begin with a brief description of China's migration regulations and labour situation and an overview of the three selected case studies.
China's Evolving Migration Governance
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the legal framework concerning foreign nationals had seen numerous changes since the PRC joined the World Trade Organisation on 11 December 2001. Historically, the administrative framework governing migration divided authority among several different ministries and departments but is now facing challenges that may instigate new developments. Aside from the pandemic, an important background issue is the fact that the PRC is standing on the verge of a demographic transition. As a consequence of the ‘One Child Policy’, a long-term state policy enshrined in the Constitution with a tremendous impact on the socio-economic structure in China,Footnote 10 China is currently among the most populous countries yet has one of the lowest fertility rates.Footnote 11 The 2021 national census showed that population growth in China has slipped to the lowest rate since modern census-taking began in the 1950s.Footnote 12 Consequently, China has faced an aging society since 2000. As a response to China's looming demographic crisis, in August 2021, the PRC's top legislative body passed an amendment to the Population and Family Planning Law (人口与计划生育法, renkou yu jihua shengyu fa). This modification of the law, in other words, marks the end of the four-decades-long fertility control policy. While the revised Family Planning Law 2021 attempts to address the supportive measures both economically and socially, the fear of rising economic costs such as those related to income distribution, land and housing policies, and the wealth gap between classes, are likely to curb any significant population growth. As will be demonstrated in the latter part of the article, this has implications for changes to migration governance in China's border areas.
As China's population shrinks and ages, the gap in the workforce is an unavoidable issue. However, although China plays a role in both an inflow and an outflow of labour, it does not possess substantial experience in migration-related governance and generally lacks cultural diversity. Due to restrictive policies that limit their stay as well as cultural and linguistic differences, foreign nationals find it a struggle to integrate into Chinese communities. In the following section of this article, we explore this theme in the context of COVID-19, which fuelled widespread expressions of nationalism and racism online.
In this article, we examine the political and economic landscape of labour and capital, evaluating three fundamentally interlinked instances of China's transnational economic exchanges during the COVID-19 era. We draw from case studies taken from emerging economies and economies in transition, which have experienced marked changes to their transnational relationships with China. Together, these illustrate new trends of China's labour and capital policies, including enhanced responsiveness to domestic concerns impacting foreign relations; a security-centric approach to border management; and an improving regulatory approach to ordinary migration channels.
We first consider the diplomatic fallout during COVID-19 that threatens the long-term economic and political cooperation between the PRC and its partner states in Africa. Coronavirus management regimes in China disparately targeted black African migrant workers, resulting in the deprivation of essential freedoms as well as heightened levels of discriminatory treatment. High-level global condemnation and social outcry through intensive grassroots media campaigns suggest that China will soon be required to evaluate its domestic policies more carefully and improve its cultural awareness to better incorporate the needs of its guest workers.
In the second case study, we highlight cross-border communities who traditionally live everyday life across national borders via informal crossings. We use the Yunnan area as a spotlight to investigate how restrictive policies on movement during the pandemic have significantly changed the political economy landscape of the cross-border communities. Because of the complex communal and political dynamics between China and neighbouring Southeast Asian countries, we see a resultant ‘pull and push’ in the governance of this region.
The third case study focuses on bi-national migration cooperation, but from the angle of tracking the regulation of new migration flows within Serbia and the Balkans. Like other cases discussed in this article, migrants from the Balkans also faced bans on entry into China. Although the inflow and outflow of labour and migration exists in all of the Balkan states, the Republic of Serbia became one of only nine European countries to regulate their social insurance following a particularly large boom in Chinese investment in late 2018. Hence, we primarily analyse the Serbian case, while other Western Balkan countries are mentioned where relevant data is available. This section shows that, as the pandemic eased, China prioritised the (moderated) relaxation of labour migration regulations.
We begin with the diplomatic crisis in China during the initial stages of the pandemic, which threatened the nation's relationship with its African partner states.
Trade and Migration From African States
Diplomatic and economic cooperation with African states has long been a key initiative of Chinese foreign policy. This sentiment appeared as early as the 1955 Bandung Conference, the first major summit between Afro-Asian nation-states,Footnote 13 during which Premier and Foreign Minister Zhou Enlai declared that, ‘[T]hough the present economic and cultural cooperation among ourselves cannot yet be a very large scale, it can definitively be said that this … will have a great future’.Footnote 14 In the following years, the newly formed PRC invested in extensive development projects throughout Africa, culminating in the famous Tazara Railway, which stretches 1,860 kilometres from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania to Kapiri Mposhi in Zambia.Footnote 15 Today, the state has continued to pursue economic engagement with the continent, with present trade valuations approximating US$192 billion.Footnote 16 Among other projects, the PRC has especially focused on the African continent as a recipient of its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a policy and infrastructure project intended to facilitate Chinese economic cooperation throughout Europe, Africa and Asia.Footnote 17
The partnership between Africa and China has also grown to produce an influx of labour exchange in the last few decades. At present, the Chinese diaspora residing in Africa is estimated to be around 1 million.Footnote 18 Likewise, approximately 500,000 Africans are living throughout China.Footnote 19 A conservative approximation would place 20,000 of this number residing in the city of Guangzhou alone, many of whom are migrant workers pursuing new opportunities in the ‘Factory of the World’.Footnote 20 However, challenges posed by the COVID-19 crisis have illuminated systemic problems that threaten to destabilise the flow of migrant workers between these partners, and generated a forceful grassroots campaign in Africa to create a more favourable environment for guest workers in the PRC.Footnote 21 This case study will critically analyse the source of this contention and assess its projected impact on labour exchange between the parties, beginning with a brief overview of obstacles to African residents in Chinese communities which preceded these incidents.
For Africans, integration into Chinese communities was challenging from the outset. Even following China's rapid economic growth and globalisation throughout the Reform and Opening Up period (改革开放,gaige kaifang) and beyond, the PRC has lacked cultural diversity. Today, 91 per cent of the population is part of the Han Chinese majority.Footnote 22 As the population of black Africans in Guangzhou began to rise dramatically in the early 2000s, many migrants reported experiencing instances of discrimination, including accusations of racial profiling by the local police.Footnote 23 Cases of illegal residence or other offenses were often sensationalised in the local media and online, with strong xenophobic language against Africans permeating these discussions.Footnote 24 At the same time, discourse revolving around the ‘three illegals’ (三非, sanfei) or individuals that live, stay or work in China without valid documentation, rose to the forefront of national concern.Footnote 25 The penalties for such crimes were subsequently raised, placing further strain on African residents.Footnote 26 While recent years have produced ‘soft’ initiatives to combat racism in China, the lack of measures intended to address cultural and structural racism remains a persistent national problem. This is well illustrated by the PRC's lack of a unified piece of legislation that defines discrimination and provides recourse for instances of discriminatory harms.
China's initial COVID-19 management efforts further exacerbated these issues and revived xenophobic discourse targeting African workers. Like in other nation states, the PRC's administration struggled to conform to the fast-changing environment of the pandemic's early years, which still complicates transnational relations at the time of this writing. In line with national policies, provincial and local governments adopted intensive restrictions on the activities of all residents to curb or eliminate the threat of the virus. Among those facing restrictions, however, migrant workers and entrepreneurs from Africa experienced especially heightened levels of surveillance.Footnote 27 While many returned to their home countries, those that remained within the state during the initial organisation of China's coronavirus management efforts were subjected to disparate restrictions by the government. This included incidents of unnecessary or prolonged quarantines and lack of access to healthcare and random PCR testing among other problematic measures.Footnote 28 Private instances of discrimination were also well-documented, like forced evictions and the refusal of entry to certain businesses.Footnote 29 Isolation from public and private institutions ensured a dangerous and hostile living environment for these guest workers and their dependents.Footnote 30
In response to reports and news stories of these incidents, grassroots activists – especially those within Africa – began to organise and protest the treatment of Africans in Guangzhou via a social media campaign. Twitter in particular was an active venue for civil society participation, and hashtags such as #africansinchina, #chinaisracist and #chinamustexplain were used and frequently retweeted to bring attention to the situation of black Africans in Guangzhou and place pressure on the PRC's leadership and African representatives to China to ameliorate these problems.Footnote 31 Following this campaign, both heads of state and ambassadors from Africa arranged to meet with their Chinese counterparts to demand an explanation.Footnote 32 Several of these representatives drafted a joint letter demanding the ‘cessation of forceful testing, quarantine and other inhuman treatments meted out to Africans’.Footnote 33
Initially, these concerns were met with either assurances of reprisals or denial from the PRC's administration, as domestic news agencies rapidly endeavoured to disprove the allegations.Footnote 34 Despite attracting global attention, few initiatives were ultimately adopted to correct these practices and were insufficient to prohibit future instances of like harm.Footnote 35 Providing further legal protections for guest workers through legislative reforms or other measures were not pursued. In lieu of collaborating with concerned ambassadors and representatives calling for more comprehensive protections, China's leadership engaged in a reparative campaign, including a continental tour by Foreign Minister Wang YiFootnote 36 and the special inclusion of Africa in the PRC's vaccine rollout.Footnote 37 To many, these methods were regarded as insufficient in addressing the harms to black Africans in Guangzhou.
The discriminatory policies in Guangzhou have also been connected to local crackdowns on Chinese citizens living throughout Africa. These reports occurred a month after the social media campaign began and included ‘reciprocating evictions of Chinese nationals in Kenya, increased scrutinisation of immigration documents for every Chinese national in Nigeria, and cracking down and arresting Chinese citizens involved in the Wildlife trade in Uganda’.Footnote 38 Like black Africans living in Guangzhou, Chinese citizens living throughout Africa have also been historically targeted in racially motivated attacks and disparate government policies. However, the intensity and reciprocity of these acts suggests that the migrant workers living in either destination now occupy a newly difficult and dangerous position, particularly as economies recover in the aftermath of a health crisis.
The pandemic has served as a reminder of the absolute necessity of addressing domestic racial disparities to protect the health, welfare and very lives of guest workers and migrants, and revealed a new and previously unexplored nexus between this issue and the maintenance of Sino-African relations. Several related conclusions may be drawn from this basis. First, although the PRC has prohibited access to Twitter and other platforms within its borders, the state is not immune to civic activism abroad via social media campaigns. These fora present a challenge to the administration and demand accountability for racially motivated policies. Second, the strong response of African activists and representatives to the treatment of their nationals in Guangzhou suggests that similar incidents will not be tolerated. In a press released published in the aftermath of Deputy Commissioner Kwesi Quartey's meeting with Liu Yuxi, Ambassador to the African Union, the Directorate of Information and Communication announced that, ‘Africa values its relationship with China, but not at any price. Further acts of brutality meted out to Africans will not be countenanced by the African Union and indeed all Africans.’Footnote 39
Finally, this incident has made clear that all forms of racism must be more comprehensively addressed within China if it is to remain a destination country and a partner to African states. Providing more substantive legal protections for those experiencing racial discrimination, as well as measures intended to bring social awareness to racial discrimination should be a priority for China as it continues to deepen its relationship with its global partners.
The following section will build upon and extend this analysis to discuss issues of labour within the PRC's border regions, with an emphasis on communities along the border that have been disparately impacted by COVID-19 policies – some which continue to remain in place.
COVID-19: The PRC's Border Regions
China is surrounded by 14 states along its 22,000 km international borders, making it the state with the second-largest number of neighbours.Footnote 40 From the perspective of densely populated areas, China's border regions can be roughly divided into three geographic parts: the northeast, the northwest, and the southwest frontiers.Footnote 41 Correspondingly, there exist three border trade regions in Heilongjiang, Uyghur Autonomous Region, and Guangxi-Yunnan.Footnote 42 Border prefectures maintain special regulations for resident communities as the citizens often are ethnically related in so-called ‘cross-border communities.Footnote 43 They traditionally live everyday life across national borders and very often the crossings are informal. Although a lot of interaction takes place through these borders, the official border governance in China typically follows a security-centric trajectory. As the following cases will show, the pandemic reinforced the security-centric border system in these cross-border communities, which directly implicates the political economy landscape of labour and capital in the border regions.
A wealth of literature emphasises China's border governance towards Central Asia and illustrates the evolving role the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation plays from the perspective of border management, the security of the regions and the supervision of trade and investment.Footnote 44 Although substantial scholarship likewise exists on the northern border areas, very limited studies of the southwest frontier have been conducted. Therefore, this section focuses on the Green Border in Yunnan province. The thick rainforest at the Yunnan border includes a lively ‘grey border’ market with goods and people travelling from different countries; before the pandemic, Myanmar residents made routine journeys into the neighbouring stateFootnote 45 for work or trade. Although this practice is formally illegal, local authorities typically acquiesce as the crossings provide valuable resources to the border economy through the provision of goods as well as the contribution of labour.Footnote 46 However, the COVID-19 pandemic, with its resulting restrictions on cross-border travel, has had a significant impact on China's border regions. During the pandemic, in October 2021, China released a new border law: the National Land Boundary Law (中华人民共和国陆地国界法, zhonghua renmin gongheguo ludi guojie fa), which represents an effort to strengthen its border control and advance the nation's security interests. In this section, we consider the southwestern border region as a case study to explore the various impacts that COVID-19 restrictions have imposed on the residents of these areas and articulate how this relates to the broader relationship between China and its neighbouring states. This analysis will begin with a discussion of new restrictions on informal border crossings and their impact on those living outside China.
The Escalating Restriction Polices around Yunnan
At the outset of the pandemic, Yunnan province enhanced its border control measures through policies such as the Three Lines of Defence (三道防线,san dao fang xian). This specific policy was intended to quickly curb imported COVID-19 cases and prevent further infections through border control. The first line of defence was to set up temperature checkpoints at airports, railway stations, expressway entrances and main roads into the province. The second line of control consisted of communal surveillance and grid management (网格化管理, wang ge hua guan li)Footnote 47 of neighbourhoods. The third line focused on the distribution of medical resources. The government in Yunnan is said to have built 200 new fever clinics around the province to ensure the observation, hospitalisation, and quarantine of infected individuals.Footnote 48
With multiple imported cases and resulting clusters of local transmission, the Chinese Central Leading Group on Taskforce on Responding to the COVID-19 Outbreak chaired by Premier Li Keqiang urged for intensified efforts to control China's borders and impose quarantines.Footnote 49 In response, the border area restrictions escalated and migration controls became more rigorously enforced. The police militarised the border, conducting intensive surveillance with drones and facial recognition systems.Footnote 50 However, as cross-border communities were highly reliant on the permeability of the Green Border, these restrictive policies brought considerable difficulties to their livelihoods. If caught informally crossing the border, migrants would be held accountable for violating the quarantine policies and risk losing their border residency status, thereby compromising their ability to move freely across the border and often their only source of income.Footnote 51 According to reports, several border-crossers without entry documents were arrested or repatriated immediately.Footnote 52 Some were sentenced to prison with fines imposed. Overall, these regulations limited such movements, curtailing economic activity in the border region.Footnote 53 The following section will address the inverse situation, wherein Chinese migrant workers crossed into Vietnam to search for employment.
Chinese Migrant Workers Crossing into Vietnam to Search for Employment
Since China is a destination for and a source of international migrants, Yunnan is at the frontline of workers not only entering, but also leaving China. Accordingly, we explore the outflow of Chinese migrant workers from the province into Vietnam to investigate changes in emigration governance during the pandemic. China's migration governance in relation to Vietnam has also been significantly affected by COVID-19 travel restrictions, in addition to the brewing tensions between the countries related to the South China Sea. While relations have mostly normalised within the past few decades with China becoming Vietnam's largest trading partner,Footnote 54 the impact of the COVID-19 crisis threatens to upend this precarious stability.
As is common with states sharing a land border, migration between China and Vietnam has been a historical constant.Footnote 55 This is particularly true during the era of economic globalisation, wherein both nations are considered both migration source and destination countries.Footnote 56 Both states have also experienced recent labour shortages, prompting further legal migration as well as more illicit forms of migration, such as human trafficking.Footnote 57 Typically, as the state with the faster-growing economy, China was considered the primary destination for Vietnamese migrants searching for employment. However, in 2020, this trend made a rather public shift: migrants primarily from Yunnan province and the Guangxi Autonomous Region illegally crossing the border have been detained and subsequently repatriated by the Vietnamese Public Security Border Bureau. These migrants’ destinations were often Chinese manufacturing companies operating in Vietnam that were struggling under the current labour shortage in the state, creating a further political complication.Footnote 58 To reduce these flows, the Chinese government began to extend its existing wall along its southern border with Vietnam – possibly both to keep migrants out and to keep Chinese nationals in. The following analysis will discuss the problematic consequences within China that result from the inhibition of free movement and economic strain in China's border regions.
Human Trafficking Trends during the Pandemic
With economic uncertainty devastating vulnerable communities, human trafficking is on the rise. Because of longstanding historical connections, transborder marriage in the southwestern provinces was relatively common.Footnote 59 Previously, this phenomenon of transborder marriage was primarily local and took place within particular ethnic groups. However, this dynamic has now dramatically changed. Since 2000, transnational bride trafficking has become one of the primary forms of cross-border human trafficking in the region.Footnote 60 Most trafficked women are of an ethnic minority from impoverished communities in bordering countries who have had little access to education. The PRC's one-child policy and a cultural preference for male offspring has caused a huge gender imbalance in China. The massively outnumbered men are thus burdened with soaring marriage costs, such as betrothal gifts.Footnote 61 Therefore, women with little access to education from neighbouring countries who lack contact with their family at home are very attractive in the marriage market in China.
China's economic growth is another factor which influences trafficking, as more women from border countries anticipate opportunities for well-paid employment in China. These women and underaged girls are forced or tricked by brokers who arrange a transnational marriage with Chinese men. They are promised a good job or improved financial health in the PRC but find themselves exploited for sex and childbearing. The data suggest that the pandemic has fuelled this bride trafficking. As a result of the economic hardship and job loss caused by the pandemic, women and underage girls in border countries are desperate to find jobs to support their families so they are more easily deceived and lured into the sex trade and false marriages.Footnote 62 It is reported that in Cambodia, for example, there was a new case every three days on average in 2020 – double the caseload of previous years.Footnote 63
The Political Economy of Labour and Capital in the Border Regions
Migration governance in the PRC's border regions has typically been dictated by complex communal and political dynamics, which have fostered primarily open transnational relationships. Meanwhile, the communities along the borders have close economic ties and maintain historical and cultural transborder connections. However, residents living along the PRC's land borders have been placed under new strain following the advent of the pandemic. Informal crossings have become highly regulated as China imposes its stringent pandemic management regime; consequently, human trafficking has markedly increased. Delocalised conflicts also threaten the PRC's international relations objectives. For example, these conflicts complicate the PRC's efforts to develop its relationships with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states, who already play, and will continue to play, a critical role in this ‘geo-economic narrative of globalization’.Footnote 64 The pandemic has placed the PRC in a delicate position, which demands further consideration of its nearest neighbours.
The PRC does experiment with different measures to continue facilitating trade despite pandemic-related restrictions. The BAOBO Card (胞波卡, bao bo ka) is a notable example. By 2020 in China (Yunnan) Pilot Free Trade Zone Dehong Area, 26,117 people from Myanmar were issued a BAOBO Card.Footnote 65 The BAOBO Card is a chip card the size of an ID card and integrates the functions of a Myanmar National Identity Card, a Myanmar-China Border Pass, a Health Certificate, a Work Permit, a Temporary Residence Permit for Overseas Border Residents in Border Areas in Yunnan, and a Training Certificate as needed by Myanmar migrants who are working and doing business in Ruili, a border city in Yunnan.Footnote 66 With this card, Myanmar people can use the facial recognition and identity information checking processes, access medical services, and supply proof of training.
In the following section, the paper will turn to the Western Balkans, to highlight labour and capital flows and the regulations governing them between China and the region, focusing predominantly on Serbia as China's main partner.
COVID-19: The Western Balkans
Although there are both migration inflows and outflows virtually all Balkan countries the Republic of Serbia was one of only nine European countries to regulate its social security following a particularly large boom in Chinese investment in late 2018. Therefore, the following section will first analyse the Serbian case. It then considers other Western Balkan countries for which relevant data are available. The section then concludes that the main purpose for these regulatory changes, both in Serbia and in the Western Balkans as a whole, has been to facilitate labour migration. Each sub-section will first discuss capital relations, then focus on labour issues in terms of regulatory changes to provide a complete picture based upon the available information.
The development of China's relations with the Western Balkans is inextricably linked to economic cooperation. From 2013 to 2019, China's investments in Europe were mainly focused on transportation (US$63,220 million), agriculture (US$54,580 million), finance (US$31,900 million), energy (US$31,390 million), technology (US$26,130 million), entertainment (US$23,940 million), real estate (US$22,540 million) and logistics (US$18,690 million).Footnote 67 Investments in chemicals, health, metals, tourism and utilities were comparatively lower before the pandemic; however, many of these investments have proven crucial to China's ‘vaccine policy’. Moreover, according to one study,Footnote 68 the rapid expansion in foreign investment has led to an increase in the number of Chinese nationals working abroad. With the growth of bilateral trade, both China and the EU have seen increased migration in recent years. A similar trend has developed in the Western Balkans. In the following sections, we address Chinese labour migration regulations in the region before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Western Balkans and China
In terms of trade, most of the Western Balkan countries (North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo) are similar to the EU's profile. However, unlike the EU, all countries within the Western Balkans (with the notable exception of Kosovo) belong to the ‘17+1’ group,Footnote 69 which can be defined as a ‘China-centric strategic bloc in Central and Eastern Europe’ established in 2012. The group is also known as the China-Central and Eastern European Countries Cooperation and is part of China's ambitious BRI.Footnote 70 It should therefore come as no surprise that China was taking initiative to introduce stronger regulatory measures in the region even before the COVID-19 pandemic. However, not all Western Balkan countries are ‘equal’ in terms of their legal relations with China. Of all the Western Balkan countries, Serbia has the most regulations on migration and labour, while Kosovo has none, as China considers it part of the former. This should not be surprising, given the close legal ties between China and Serbia.
Before assessing the Serbian case, a brief background on China's ties with the jurisdiction is helpful. First of all, Serbia is one of the few countries within which China has regulated social security. This would not have been possible without the Chinese Social Security Law (SSL), which came into force in 2011, commensurate with the development of relations between the jurisdictions. The SSL included five social insurance programmes, namely pension insurance, health insurance, work injury insurance, unemployment benefits, and maternity insurance. In parallel with the increase in trade and migration, China signed 9 bilateral social security agreements with European countries from 2002 to 2019, thereby allowing Chinese nationals to be exempt from social security contributions in party host countries for 5 years. In all cases, the agreements are reciprocal and cover pensions and social security contributions, while health care, occupational accidents and maternity are not covered.Footnote 71 In addition, all agreements cover dispatched persons, airline employees and consular staff, as well as civil servants.Footnote 72 One of the few non-EU countries, and the only one among the Western Balkan countries, with which China has signed an agreement is the Republic of Serbia. In acknowledgement of this close relationship, this analysis begins by addressing the case of Serbia.
The Case of Serbia
Chinese migration into Serbia will first be addressed in this section, then followed by the reverse, Serbian migration into China. With regard to the former, the aforementioned social security agreement followed an increase in Chinese investments in Serbia. Although Serbia is not necessarily a leader in every sector,Footnote 73 at €1,996,500 it still leads the region when it comes to total Chinese FDI inflows. This growth runs parallel to developments in diplomatic relations. After the disintegration of Yugoslavia,Footnote 74 China and Serbia signed a strategic partnership agreement in 2009. This partnership was upgraded to a comprehensive strategic partnership in 2016. A year later, China and Serbia lifted visa restrictions on travellers between the two countries. More recently in 2018, anticipating an increase in the number of Chinese workers in Serbia, China and Serbia settled the legal status of ‘dispatched persons’. This remarkable development represents the only bilateral agreement between a Western Balkan country and China regarding labour migration. Its adoption testifies to the fact that the strengthened relationship between the countries allows for the regulation of Chinese workers outside of China.
The agreement was proposed during Serbian President Vučić's visit to Beijing, where a memorandum was signed with a private Chinese tyre manufacturer, (Linglong). The following week, a law on social security between China and Serbia regulating dispatched personsFootnote 75 was adopted by the Serbian National Assembly – which is unexpectedly fast for the Serbian bureaucracy.Footnote 76 The law was followed by an agreement on 19 May 2019 permitting the deployment of Chinese police officers to the ‘project sites’ of Chinese investors, as well as tourist sites. This is regulated by Article 1 of the Memorandum of Understanding between the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Serbia and the Ministry of Public Security People's Republic of China on conducting joint police patrols.Footnote 77 However, the public presentation of the two agreements sparked controversy in Serbia as an opposition party, called ‘Enough is Enough!’, publicly used the agreement to revive a pre-existing rumour that ‘Chinese prisoners’ would be exported to Serbia and guarded by Chinese police. As a result, the Serbian public was convinced that Serbian laws no longer applied to Chinese nationals, and news stories proclaiming the initiation of ‘Chinese colonialism’ were circulated in the media.Footnote 78
The agreements were followed by an influx of mostly dispatched workers from China during the pandemic, which further exacerbated local tensions. However, the law's significance soon became clear. According to official data from the Serbian National Labour Agency, the official number of dispatched people increased from 193 in 2019 to 494 in 2020 and 2,374 in August 2021, a twelvefold increase.Footnote 79 While this is a relatively small number compared to the total number of Chinese workers sent abroad each year, it shows a clear upward trend that largely parallels the increasing Chinese direct investment in Serbia.Footnote 80. Thus, even during the pandemic, the introduction of this law facilitated closer ties between the states.
Moreover, the increasing number of Chinese dispatched workers paralleled the increasing number of Vietnamese dispatched workers who began working on the same project – that of the aforementioned Chinese privately-owned Shandong Linglong tyre manufacturing company in Zrenjanin, Serbia. This was discovered when approximately 500 Vietnamese workers were found living in appalling conditions, living in facilities without heating, warm water or beds. The workers were not paid their salary, and their passports were confiscated by the factory's management. They had been hired by Chinese contractors of Linglong who had outsourced their labour dispatch to Vietnamese agencies for the construction of Linglong's factory.
Subsidised by the Serbian government, the factory was initially hailed as an advancement of relations between Serbia and China, yet the case now threatens the relationship of all three implicated states – China, Serbia and Vietnam. Initially, Linglong refused to allow NGOs to speak with the affected migrants, although they have since permitted limited access. The case was discussed at the European Parliament on 16 December 2021. Moreover, Serbia does not maintain any diplomatic relationship with Vietnam – the closest Vietnamese embassy is in Romania, which serves the population both there and in Serbia. This further complicated the provision of aid and even mutual understanding between Serbian activists and Vietnamese workers, particularly as there were initially no Vietnamese-Serbian translators available.
This incident also illustrates how the impact of China's new migration governance in relation to its border countries extends to its partners in Europe, and particularly in Serbia. The outcome of the Linglong case remains to be seen. This article previously asserted that migration from Vietnam to China has been a historical constant that has been reversed as Chinese companies outsource to Vietnam. Here, we can further this argument by acknowledging that these same migratory trends can be seen within the Western Balkans. In short, the relationships between Chinese companies and (in this case, Vietnamese) labour agencies began to be ‘exported’ into the Western Balkans. Similarities can be seen in the use of labour dispatch agencies that are close to Chinese companies, and the existence of local labour shortages. Also, to journalists and civil society organisations, the Linglong incident has raised allegations human trafficking similar to the ones previously discussed in Vietnam. Thus, labour and capital relations between China and Vietnam, and Serbia and China, began to mirror each other during COVID-19.
However, when discussing Serbian citizens travelling into China, there is a completely different situation. Here, there are no significant capital investments by Serbia into China, which would be followed by increased labour dispatch. On the contrary, for Serbian citizens, as elsewhere after the outbreak of COVID-19, the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade published the 26 March 2020 statement from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the National Immigration Administration banning the entry of foreigners, including those who had valid visas and residence permits before 28 March.Footnote 81 The ban was then relaxed on 28 September and the proclamation was amended. Business travellers, those seeking family reunification, or those with work permits could enter China without having to apply for a new visa, while those whose visas have expired in the meantime could apply for a new one.Footnote 82 However, on 13 August, China's embassy in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, issued an announcement regarding visa facilitation for foreigners who hold a residence permit. It included a list of 36 European countries for which similar rules applied and included all the countries of the Western Balkans, except Kosovo.Footnote 83 Hence, with the sole exception of Kosovo, China could be said to view Serbia and the Western Balkans as part of Europe in terms of travel regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic.Footnote 84 Despite Serbia's special relationship with China in terms of labour migration, there seems to be no ‘special’ advantage for Serbian citizens when it came to travelling to China,Footnote 85 aside from labour migration becoming an area of increased focus.
The Case of Montenegro, and Regional Differences
Serbia's relationship with China is not generalisable within the region, although other developments during the pandemic are similarly unique. A peculiarity of the Western Balkans is that Montenegro and Albania remain two ‘traditional’ hubs for illegal Chinese migration, which represent attractive jurisdictions for their less stringent legal regulations.Footnote 86 Therefore, it is difficult to estimate the number of Chinese migrants in these countries. However, this does not indicate that Chinese immigration is not regulated at all, but rather suggests it is not the subject of special regulations.
This can best be seen in the example of Montenegro. As one of the major tourist destinations in the Balkans, the seasonal labour market is an important part of the economy and labour market. This work is generally regulated by the Law on Foreigners and the Law on Employment and Work of Foreigners; unlike Serbia, however, there are no specific agreements that would affect Chinese nationals. The lack of special regulations is perhaps understandable given that Chinese migrant and seasonal workers – although growing – make up only a small proportion of the seasonal workforce.Footnote 87 According to one study, Romanian, Russian and Chinese workers make up less than 5 per cent of the total seasonal workforce.Footnote 88
However, despite the lack of detailed data, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought the two countries closer, not only in terms of providing medical aid to Montenegro, but also in terms of the growing influx of Chinese workers despite the pandemic. A notable example of this is the return of 95 construction workers from the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) to Montenegro on 4 June 2020 to work on the Boljare Highway, the first day that foreign citizens were allowed to enter Montenegro. This fact was emphasised by Liu Jin, the Chinese ambassador to Montenegro, in a statement that projected future cooperation between the nations.Footnote 89 However, laws regulating the entry of Montenegrin citizens into China were not relaxed until 15 March 2021, when the Chinese Embassy in Montenegro issued a ‘Notice on Facilitating the Entry of Foreigners Taking Chinese Vaccines’,Footnote 90 which allowed foreign nationals and their family members coming to China to resume necessary business activities, and permitted family members of Chinese nationals and foreign nationals with Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) business travel cards to reapply for visas. About five months later on 5 July, the same arrangement was announced by the Chinese Embassy in Tirana, Albania.Footnote 91 Both are still in force at the time of this writing. Accordingly, despite the regional differences, there exists substantive cooperation efforts on promoting and enabling business activities between the jurisdictions.
Conclusion
The rise of the PRC's globalisation makes the country both a source of labour outflows and a magnet destination for migrants from all over the world. Changes due to the pandemic provide an opportunity to revisit and re-examine China's orientation of its migration laws and capital exchange. This article illustrates that partners from emerging economies and economies in transition have been subject to increased control, scrutiny, and restrictions during the pandemic, and analyses how the PRC has responded to these needs. Vulnerable communities are particularly at risk. Since the PRC has consistently regarded itself as a representative of the ‘Third World’, further neglect of the insecurity of its guest workers and the issues like discrimination which predicate these conflicts will no longer be a proper solution. Without a proactive approach, these problems will continue to harm the welfare of the state's migrants and exert a negative influence on the relationship between China and its political and economic partners.
With regard to its border areas, the formerly tolerated ‘informal’ crossings are now illegal as the PRC has escalated its stringent border migration governance. Further, transnational conflicts have been exacerbated by the pandemic. All these elements impact the local economic and political relationships between China and its border countries. As the relationship with border countries plays a critical role in the ‘geo-economic narrative of globalisation’, China is trying to find a good balance here. As for the outflow of migration, the case study of Serbia in the pandemic shows how the PRC is strengthening people-to-people ties through investment in local economies and associated migration of labour.
The PRC is drafting an alternative approach to multilateralism in the post-pandemic deglobalisation wave, and it is critical for the country to embrace change in is orientation towards its policies related to migration and capital. How the PRC assumes this role might have far-reaching implications – not only domestically but globally as well. Its new emphasis on enhanced responsiveness, a security-centric approach to border management, and an improving regulatory approach to regular migration channels is key to understanding China's next steps. In this regard, our study represents just the beginning of contemporary efforts to capture these new and essential dynamics.